7 Healthy Ways to Resolve Conflict at Church or Work

7 Healthy Ways to Resolve Conflict at Church or Work

So you’re dealing with a conflict and you’re feeling some tension with someone you work with or serve with at church.
Join the club.
But rather than let it linger, address it. The stakes are simply too high.
I’m increasingly convinced many churches simply don’t grow because
they suffer from conflict and that many teams never thrive because
there’s simply too much tension.
What do you do?
Well, first realize you’re not alone. In the United States, 70 percent of the people who go to work today will tell you they don’t like their jobs.
So many people I know get frustrated at work. And one of the top frustrations?The people they work with.
Conflict happens wherever people gather: in families, in churches, at work and in their communities.
I think Christians often struggle with conflict because:
In the name of grace, we feel we need to sacrifice truth.
When we speak truth, we often don’t know how to speak it with grace.
We worry about hurting other people’s feelings when one of the best things we can do is offer honest feedback.
We’re not sure how to support someone we genuinely disagree with.
None of that needs to be.
I have learned, through trial and error, that these seven strategies below can help me deal with conflict.
I hope they can help you.
Here are seven ways that I hope can help you resolve conflict:

1. Own your part of the conflict

Conflict and even bad chemistry is almost never 100 percent one person’s fault.
Thinking you’re not part of the problem is often the problem.
One of the best expressions I’ve heard of how to figure out the
extent to which you might be part of the problem is to ask a compelling
question: What’s it like to be on the other side of me?
Jeff Henderson asked that question in a great series at North Point Church called Climate Change.
Own what you can. What is it like to be on the other side of you? Ask some people.

2. Go direct

Often issues are mishandled because we talk about someone rather than to someone.
Your co-worker at the water cooler isn’t the problem, so why talk to him about it?
Jesus was crystal clear on how to handle conflict, but very few
Christians follow his practice. In the name of being ‘nice’ (“I can’t
tell her that!”), we become ineffective.
Talk to the person you have the problem with. Directly. If you
haven’t got the courage to do it, maybe the problem isn’t even big
enough to worry about.

3. Believe the best about others

It’s easy to assign bad motives to people. Instead, give them the
benefit of the doubt. They might not realize how they are coming
across. Believe the best about others; don’t assume the worst.
Believing the best can help you address an issue directly without
ruining the relationship. It can turn hurtful into helpful. Here’s an
example: “Rachel, you might not realize this, but sometimes your emails
can come across as demanding or even demeaning. I’m not sure you’re
aware of that, but I just wanted to let you know how they leave me
feeling sometimes. I know you probably don’t mean to do that.”
That gives the person an out, and frankly, many times, they probably had no idea they were coming across negatively.
When you believe the best about others, you tend to get the best from others.

4. Explain—don’t blame

How to talk to the person you’re struggling with is where many people struggle.
And those conversations often go sideways because people begin with
blame. Don’t blame. Explain. Instead of saying “You always” or “You
never” (which might be how you feel like starting), begin by talking
about how you experience them.
If you’re dealing with an ‘angry person’ for example, you might frame
it this way: “Jake, I just want you to know that when you get upset in a
meeting, it makes me feel like the discussion is over and I can’t make a
contribution.”
If you’re dealing with gossip, try something like: “Ryan, on Tuesday
when you told me what happened to Greg on the weekend, I felt like that
was something Greg should have told me directly.”
Do you hear the difference between explaining and blaming?
Blaming others is a guarantee that the only person who won’t grow is you.

5. Be specific

Giving one or two specific incidents is much better than making
general accusations or commenting on personality traits. “The other day
in the meeting” or “In your email on the August numbers yesterday” is
much more helpful than “You just always seem so frustrated.”
The more specific you are, the more you de-escalate conflict and move toward a hopeful ending.

6. Tell them you want things to get better

What the person you’re confronting needs is hope.
At this point, they probably feel defensive, ashamed and (hopefully) sorry.
Let them know the gifts they bring to the table and the good they do.
Tell them you are looking forward to the future and want things to work out.

7. Pray for them

I know this sounds trite, but it’s not.
Don’t pray about them. Pray for them.
It is almost impossible to stay angry with someone you pray for.
It can also give you empathy for them, and at least in your mind’s
eye, it places you both firmly at the foot of the cross in need of
forgiveness. It will take any smirk of superiority out of your attitude,
which goes a long way toward solving problems.

What Do You Think?

Do these seven steps always result in a positive outcome? No. But I
believe they will resolve the majority of cases in front of you in a
very healthy way. At least they have for me. (This approach, by the way,
is also effective at home and in most relationships in life.)
I don’t get all seven approaches right every time, but when I practice them, I find that conflict almost always resolves better.
What would you add to the list? What’s worked for you?